Linda W <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote on 17 June 2005 05:14 AM:

> I rebuilt squid with delay pools built-in.  I added an ACL for
> my specific host, even for my entire subnet.  I reduced the
> aggregate and specific IP to 5/5 & 1/1 and noticed no delay on
> loading web pages.  DSL Reports measured over 1Mb download and
> over 600Kb upload.  Do delay pools actually work?  Relevant
> params:     
> 
> First tried it with 2 pools, but in trying to simplify went
> down to 1 pool with my entire subnet included:
> delay_pools 1
> delay_class 1 2
> acl test_subnet src 192.168.3.0/255.255.255.0 delay_access 1
> allow test_subnet delay_access 1 allow all 
> delay_parameters 1 5/5 1/1   # have tried ranges from 8000/8000
> ->1/1 
> delay_initial_bucket_level 50
> 
> ---
> Near as I can tell this should slow me down to about 1
> byte/second, but am not seeing any noticable delay. 
> 
> I did have 2 pools, with my test_subnet, in the restricted
> pool, but when that failed, tried to simplify to 1 pool and an
> absurdly low limit...but seems to have no effect.  I also had a
> host-specific acl, and noted in the cache log that my host
> matched the host-specific acl -- but that made no difference    
> 
> Am I missing something obvious?  There is no direct or routed
> access 
> from the internal subnet to the outside.   Tracing and debug
> output 
> from the squid cache show that the client (my machine in this
> case) is going through the cache....but the limits don't seem
> to be enforced very well....  
> 
> Help?
> 

Have you tried checking up on the pools in the cachemgr.cgi?

It can indicate to you if the clients are falling into the pools
or not.

HTH,

Armin

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